Post by account_disabled on Feb 25, 2024 1:10:49 GMT -5
In the form of paragraphs, like a common email, sent from person to person. If all that amount of text were inside an image, it would make reading the email much more difficult for the recipient. Depending on the device on which the email is opened, the image is resized and the texts become blurry, as texts within images lose resolution quality when the image is reduced or enlarged to better fit the screen. The fashion segment, for example, is very visual. The image of the clothes, of people wearing the clothes and in super-aesthetic settings increases people's desire to purchase. For this segment and others that have the same need for visual appeal, such as decoration, footwear, entertainment and others, email marketing really needs to contain images. Example of email marketing using all images from Amaro This email marketing, for example, has most of its content in images.
The texts that are written in the HTML itself are the description “There are more than 1000 looks (…)”, the Buy button and the footer starting with “*check rules (…)”. DAMAGE REDUCTION IN HTML OF EMAIL MARKETING CONSISTING OF IMAGES We saw that, on the one hand, email marketing that balances images with texts present in the HTML code can have better delivery on email servers that still use content evaluation as a criterion to classify the message as spam or legitimate. We also understand that texts present as texts in HTML make email marketing lighter, more readable and accessible. But it is indisputable that certain segments of the Coinbase Virtual Currency Database market depend exclusively on images to provoke desire and interest in consumers. So how do you create email marketing based solely on images and that has good delivery and interaction performance with recipients? There are some practices that can be adopted to optimize email marketing made up entirely of images: Slice or cut email marketing artwork into image pieces When the template 's art is all in images — let's say you have a JPEG of a folder or advertisement that you want to send by email — it's important to evaluate the height of the total art to know how many slices we need to divide it into.
An email marketing that has its art similar to that of a poster or a folder, has a reasonable height, higher than a 300px high banner would be, for example. Images like this, which are very large, are heavier (in kb) and make the entire email heavier too. Even if your single image is light in size, just inserting it into the email marketing HTML will make it have a very short code, which can cause some email servers to be suspicious about the content of the message. This is also why (in addition to explaining the validity of the offers) that some emails that are entirely based on images have a large volume of text in the footer. Example of email marketing using Costume images This email marketing has its main content made up only of images. The only texts present in the HTML code are those in the footer, starting with “Follow us on our networks(…)”. Another advantage of slicing the art into smaller image pieces is that when these pieces are assembled back into the email marketing HTML, it will be possible to assign different links to each image.
The texts that are written in the HTML itself are the description “There are more than 1000 looks (…)”, the Buy button and the footer starting with “*check rules (…)”. DAMAGE REDUCTION IN HTML OF EMAIL MARKETING CONSISTING OF IMAGES We saw that, on the one hand, email marketing that balances images with texts present in the HTML code can have better delivery on email servers that still use content evaluation as a criterion to classify the message as spam or legitimate. We also understand that texts present as texts in HTML make email marketing lighter, more readable and accessible. But it is indisputable that certain segments of the Coinbase Virtual Currency Database market depend exclusively on images to provoke desire and interest in consumers. So how do you create email marketing based solely on images and that has good delivery and interaction performance with recipients? There are some practices that can be adopted to optimize email marketing made up entirely of images: Slice or cut email marketing artwork into image pieces When the template 's art is all in images — let's say you have a JPEG of a folder or advertisement that you want to send by email — it's important to evaluate the height of the total art to know how many slices we need to divide it into.
An email marketing that has its art similar to that of a poster or a folder, has a reasonable height, higher than a 300px high banner would be, for example. Images like this, which are very large, are heavier (in kb) and make the entire email heavier too. Even if your single image is light in size, just inserting it into the email marketing HTML will make it have a very short code, which can cause some email servers to be suspicious about the content of the message. This is also why (in addition to explaining the validity of the offers) that some emails that are entirely based on images have a large volume of text in the footer. Example of email marketing using Costume images This email marketing has its main content made up only of images. The only texts present in the HTML code are those in the footer, starting with “Follow us on our networks(…)”. Another advantage of slicing the art into smaller image pieces is that when these pieces are assembled back into the email marketing HTML, it will be possible to assign different links to each image.